Does evolution lead to maximizing behavior?

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Version: Final published version
Serval ID
serval:BIB_192E4B8D1A3F
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Does evolution lead to maximizing behavior?
Journal
Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution
Author(s)
Lehmann L., Alger I., Weibull J.
ISSN
1558-5646 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0014-3820
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2015
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
69
Number
7
Pages
1858-1873
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
A long-standing question in biology and economics is whether individual organisms evolve to behave as if they were striving to maximize some goal function. We here formalize this "as if" question in a patch-structured population in which individuals obtain material payoffs from (perhaps very complex multimove) social interactions. These material payoffs determine personal fitness and, ultimately, invasion fitness. We ask whether individuals in uninvadable population states will appear to be maximizing conventional goal functions (with population-structure coefficients exogenous to the individual's behavior), when what is really being maximized is invasion fitness at the genetic level. We reach two broad conclusions. First, no simple and general individual-centered goal function emerges from the analysis. This stems from the fact that invasion fitness is a gene-centered multigenerational measure of evolutionary success. Second, when selection is weak, all multigenerational effects of selection can be summarized in a neutral type-distribution quantifying identity-by-descent between individuals within patches. Individuals then behave as if they were striving to maximize a weighted sum of material payoffs (own and others). At an uninvadable state it is as if individuals would freely choose their actions and play a Nash equilibrium of a game with a goal function that combines self-interest (own material payoff), group interest (group material payoff if everyone does the same), and local rivalry (material payoff differences).
Keywords
Animals, Biological Evolution, Cooperative Behavior, Game Theory, Genetic Fitness, Models, Genetic, Social Behavior
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
04/06/2015 10:03
Last modification date
20/08/2019 12:49
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